Τετάρτη, 19 Ιουνίου 2013

St. Tykhon (Tychon), bishop of Voronezh, wonderworker of Zadonsk (13/26 August )

Hierarch Tychon (in the world, Timothy) was born in 1724 into
the family of a most poor cleric of the village of Korotska (Valdai
district) and soon after birth was deprived of his father. His
childhood and boyhood passed amidst terrible poverty: once he
had to work a whole day for the inhabitants of his native village
for a piece of bread. He barely escaped recruitment as a soldier
and entered the Novgorod Seminary to study, in which he later
became an instructor. Certain special circumstances (a mira­culous
rescue from mortal danger and certain visions) disposed him toward
accepting monasticism. In 1758, he was tonsured into monasticism
with the name Tychon. The following year he was appointed rector
of the Tver Seminary, where he gave lectures on moral theology.
Moreover, he gave them in Russian, and not in Latin, as was the
accepted practice before him. Besides the students, many outside
persons would come to his lectures.

In 1761, in the 37th year of his life, Hieromonk Tychon, in accordance
with a manifest indication from on high, was chosen to be a bishop.
For about two years he was a vicar in Novgorod, and for about
four years (1763­1767) he headed the episcopal cathedra in
Voronezh on his own. The whole time of his episcopate, he diligently
preached and urged the priests subordinate to him to do the same.
In Voronezh, from pagan times, a feast in honor of Yarilo was
kept, which was accompanied by every kind of excess. Once the
Hierarch unexpectedly appeared at the public square at the very
height of the merry­making and began to denounce the dissolute.
His word had such an effect that the feast was no longer revived.

Meanwhile, his intensified labors ruined Hierarch Tychon's health.
He obtained release from his post and passed the last sixteen
years (1767­1783) of his life in retirement in the Zadonsky
Monastery (near the Don River, to the north of the city of Voronezh).
All of his time, with the exception of 4­5 hours of rest,
was dedicated to prayer, reading the word of God, works of charity
and the compilation of soul­benefiting compositions. Every
day he would go to church. At home he would often fall on his
knees and, bathed in tears, as the most vile sinner, would cry
out: "Lord, spare me; Lord, have mercy!" Every day,
without fail, he would read several chapters from Sacred Scripture
(especially from the Prophet Isaiah), and on the road, he would
never travel without a small Psalter. All of his 400­ruble
pension would go to charity, and thither too was directed all
that he received as gifts from acquaintances.

He would often set off in simple monastic garb for the nearby
city (Yelets) and visit those confined in the local prison. He
would comfort them, dispose them towards repentance and then bestow
alms upon them. He himself was non­acquisitive to the highest
degree and lived amid conditions most simple and poor. Sitting
at a meagre table, he would often remember the poor who did not
have such sustenance as he, and he would begin to reproach himself
for laboring so little, according to his judgment, for the Church.

Here bitter tears would begin to flow from his eyes. By nature
ardent and irascible, he was amazingly meek and mild. He would
bow down to the ground before his cell­attendant, asking
forgiveness for some word that seemed offensive to him, and he
would always try to return good when someone inflicted some insult
upon him. Once, in the home of an acquaintance, he entered into
a conversation with a nobleman, a Volterian, and meekly, but so
powerfully refuted the atheist in every way that the proud man
could not endure and, forgetting himself, struck the Hierarch
in the face. Hierarch Tychon threw himself at his feet and began
to beg forgiveness that he had lead him into irritation. This
humility of the Hierarch so affected the impertinent insulter
that he was converted to faith and became a good Christian.

Saint Tychon possessed the gift of performing wonders and of clairvoyance,
and would read the thoughts of a conversor. In 1778, when the
Emperor Alexander I was born, the Hierarch foretold many events
of his reign and, in particular, that Russia would be saved, and
the invader (Napoleon) would perish. "In many instances,
the Lord God listened to him" ­ wrote Hierarch Tychon's cell­attendant.

The Hierarch especially loved to converse with the simple people;
he would comfort them in their difficult lot and help those who
were ruined. Children would visit him from the settlement near
the monastery. He would teach them prayers, and after a talk
would bestow money on them. Hierarch Tychon's blessed end occurred
on the 13th of August,1783. After 63 years, his incorrupt relics
were opened, and in 1861 he was added to the choir of the saints.
Among Hierarch Tychon Zadonsky's written works, a collection
of short instructions full of examples from life, which is called
"Spiritual Treasure Collected from the World", enjoys
particular popularity.

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